Glen v. Commissioner

79 T.C. No. 13, 79 T.C. 208, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1982
DocketDocket No. 4390-81
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 T.C. No. 13 (Glen v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glen v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. No. 13, 79 T.C. 208, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57 (tax 1982).

Opinion

Scott, Judge'.

Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioners’ income tax for the calendar year 1978 in the amount of $2,402. Many of the issues raised by the pleadings have been disposed of by agreement of the parties, leaving for our decision only whether petitioners are entitled to deduct any amount in excess of that which respondent agrees is allowable as a charitable contribution for the value of tapes of interviews one of the petitioners had with noted scientists.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Most of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.

Petitioners, husband and wife, who resided in San Mateo, Calif., at the time of the filing of the petition in this case, filed a joint Federal income tax return for the calendar year 1978.

William Glen (petitioner) is a student of plate tectonics. He is, and has been since 1957, an instructor in the Department of Geology at the College of San Mateo and has served intermittently as an instructor in the Department of Paleontology at the University of California at Berkeley. Petitioner is the author of one of the best selling college level textbooks on plate tectonics. This book was published prior to 1977. From 1977 through 1979, petitioner was a student at Union Graduate School, Antioch College, and he received his Ph. D. degree from Antioch in the history of science. Petitioner wrote his doctoral thesis in 1979 on the history of geophysics research, which triggered the development of plate tectonics theory. Both before and while he was doing his research for his Ph. D. thesis, petitioner interviewed the majority of the leading scientists in the areas of atom counting as a procedure for dating rocks, rock fossil magnetism, and magnetism of the rocks of the ocean floor. Scientists working in these three fields had proved the continental drift theory and had triggered the plate tectonics revolution. In addition, petitioner also interviewed some scientists in other earth sciences which were peripheral to geophysics. Petitioner made tape recordings of these interviews with the leading scientists. He used some of the information from these tape recordings for his doctoral thesis and, in addition, he used for his thesis institutional records, personal correspondence, scientific notebooks, memorabilia, photographs, scientific correspondence, and published literature. Petitioner also incorporated a small portion of the information contained in the taped interviews with the leading scientists into a book which was published shortly before the trial of this case in March 1982. The book is a detailed intellectual scientific history of the plate tectonics revolution.

Petitioner personally conducted the interviews with the scientists and recorded these interviews. Prior to conducting the interviews, petitioner would spend anywhere from several hours to several days in biographical research, reading through all the literature which the scientist to be interviewed had published during his career. This was necessary in order to develop questions for the interview. Petitioner received no compensation either for his preparatory work for interviews or for the time spent in interviewing. Petitioner was in no way compensated for the time he spent in producing the tapes and was not compensated for his out-of-pocket costs, such as travel and related expenses and the cost of the tapes.1

In 1978, petitioner donated 62 hours of the tapes he had developed during interviews with the various scientists to the Bancroft Library at the University of California at Berkeley (Bancroft Library). Petitioner retained duplicates of the tapes which he gave to the Bancroft Library. Although petitioner obtained signed copyright release forms from the interviewees in the tapes, it was his understanding that the copyright laws did not protect either his or the interviewees’ interests in the tapes.2 In accepting these tapes, the Bancroft Library agreed that the tapes were going into their archives in perpetuity and that the University would preserve the tapes in perpetuity.

At the time petitioner donated the tapes to the Bancroft Library, the library agreed that the tapes would not be used for a period of 10 years without the permission of petitioner. Petitioner obtained this agreement from the library because he intended to use some of the information contained in the tapes for portions of a book which he was then planning to publish and which was published shortly before the trial of this case.

There is no market for oral history tapes such as those donated by petitioner to the Bancroft Library. However, several university libraries in the country, in addition to the Bancroft Library, have obtained tapes comparable to those donated by petitioner by employing someone to conduct the interviews. When an individual is employed to do interviews, the cost to the library for his salary and expenses is approximately $100 per hour of taped interview. This cost is based on the time and expenses of the interviewer. The noted scientists who are the interviewees generally do not charge for giving their interviews, and the scientists who are the interviewees in the 62 hours of tapes given by petitioner to the Bancroft Library were not paid by petitioner, or anyone else, for the contribution they made to the production of the tapes.

Petitioner claimed as a deduction on his Federal income tax return for the year 1978 only the travel and incidental costs which he incurred in connection with procuring the tapes. In his petition, petitioner claimed a deduction for $6,200, with the following explanation: "62 Hours of tape recordings donated to U.C. Berkeley verified by formal letter of Deposit by University.” The parties agree that if petitioner is entitled to deduct a total of $6,200 for donation of the tapes to the Bancroft Library, he will be entitled to an overpayment of income tax for the year 1978.

OPINION

Section 170(a)3 allows a deduction for charitable contributions made to organizations described in section 170(c). Where the charitable gift is of property, the amount of the contribution is the fair market value of the property at the time the gift is made, reduced as provided in section 170(e)(1). Under section 170(e)(1)(A), the amount of a charitable contribution of property made after December 31, 1969, is required to be reduced by the amount of gain, other than long-term capital gain, which would have been realized if the property had been sold at its fair market value at the time the contribution was made. The effect of the provision of section 170(e)(1)(A) is to cause the allowable deduction for property donated, which is not an asset that, if sold, would produce long-term capital gain, to be limited to the taxpayer’s cost or basis in the donated property.

Because of the provisions of section 170(e)(1)(A), if the tapes which petitioner donated to the Bancroft Library were not capital assets, petitioner is entitled to deduct only his cost of such tapes, which amount respondent has conceded to be deductible. The parties have agreed on the deductible amount under these circumstances.4

Section 1222 provides that the term "long-term capital gain” means the gain from the sale or exchange of a capital asset as defined in section 1221.

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Glen v. Commissioner
79 T.C. No. 13 (U.S. Tax Court, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 T.C. No. 13, 79 T.C. 208, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glen-v-commissioner-tax-1982.